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Labour market developments, including jobs and unemployment in Canada and internationally. Trends in globalization including developments in emerging economies such as China, Russia, and Eastern Europe. Social policy including employment insurance and training.

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E-mail, Cell Telephone

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I teach Strategic Management and Corporate Governance in the MBA programs at the Telfer School of Management, and Artificial Intelligence, E-Business, and Security and Privacy at the School of Electrical and Computer Engineering.

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For the past 15 years, Dr. Labonté’s work has focused on the health equity impacts of contemporary globalization.
His current research projects include the health equity impacts of global health worker migration and medical tourism, globalization-related pathways of influence on the health of Canadians, health and human rights, comprehensive primary health care reform, trade and health, and global health diplomacy (how health is positioned in foreign policy).

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I have a PhD. In the History of Education. My topics of study are the history of sex education, contraception and abortion in Canada. I use a feminist translational approach that connects the local to the global. I am currently working on a history of the birth control pill in Canada between 1960-1980 and its impact on young, single, university women. I also am researching "abortion tourism" or, the travel women undertake to access abortion services at clinics within Canada.

Other areas of expertise:

Contraception and Abortion
Sex Education
History of Sexuality
Canadian Studies

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I am interested in examining how global processes—intersecting with gender, ethnicity, migration status and other social identifiers—are implicated in health and well-being. At present, my program of research examines the impact of shifts in the global economy on the social and economic well-being of different groups of immigrants, migrants, and refugees and their families.